=LDR 00000nam 2200000 4500 =001 INLIS000000000011048 =005 20240402012525 =035 ##$$a 0010-0424000003 =007 ta =008 240402################|##########|#|## =020 ##$$a 9781003202257 =082 ##$$a 340.11 =084 ##$$a 340.11 MAR m =100 #$$a Markets, constitutions, and inequality =245 1#$$a Markets, constitutions, and inequality /$c edited by Anna Chadwick etc =250 ##$$a 1st Edition =260 ##$$a New York, NY :$b Routledge,$c 2023 =300 ##$$a 270 p =500 ##$$a e-book =520 ##$$a ABSTRACT This interdisciplinary collection examines the significance of constitutions in setting the terms and conditions upon which market economies operate. With some important exceptions, most notably from the tradition of Latin American constitutionalism, scholarship on constitutional law has paid negligible attention to questions of how constitutions relate to economic phenomena. A considerable body of literature has debated the due limits of the exercise of executive and legislative power, and discussions about legitimacy, democracy, and the adjudication of rights (civil and political, and socioeconomic) abound, yet scant attention has been paid by constitutional lawyers to the ways in which constitutions may protect and empower economic actors, and to how constitutions might influence the regulation and governance of specific markets. =600 #4$$a Law and economics.